Wayne F. Lee and Paulette D. Lee appeal the grant of summary judgment to Southern Telecom Company, Gilbert Southern Corporation, and Level 3 Communications (collectively “Southern Tele-com”) in the Lees’ action for trespass. The Lees’ claim arose from Southern Telecom’s subcontractor laying underground cable on the Lees’ property. The Lees contend the trial court erred by holding that they did not have sufficient title to the land where the cable was installed to maintain an action for trespass and erred by finding that because independent contractors installed the cable, Southern Tele-com was not responsible for and is insulated from the trespass. We agree and reverse the trial court’s grant of summary judgment.
The standards applicable to motions for summary judgment are announced in
Lau’s Corp. v. Haskins,
Giving the Lees all the benefits to which they are entitled as the nonmovants, the record shows that they were the owners of the land. Southern Telecom, through a sub-contractor, began laying conduit and fiber optic cable along Oliff-Thornton and Jack Deal Roads (“the roads”), what it thought was the county right-of-way. The deed through which the Lees took title to their land stated that the property was conveyed subject to all easements, leases, and rights of way of record or shown on a plat attached to the deed. The plat incorrectly showed a 30-foot right-of-way along the roads. Southern *643 Telecom’s subcontractor was laying the cable in what it believed to be the right-of-way as measured from 15 feet from the center of the roads. This meant the cable was being installed between four or five feet from the edge of the road.
When Wayne Lee saw what was being done, he protested to those who were on site laying the cable that they were laying the cable on his land. Nevertheless, the cable was placed four to five feet from the edge of the road for several hundred yards along the Lees’ land. Lee also complained that trees were damaged on another part of his property and that rows of crops along the edge of the road had been dug up.
After the cable was installed, a company adjusting claims arising from the installation of the cable tendered to Lee a check for $675. Lee, however, did not accept the payment. The record shows that after the fact, the Appling County Board of Commissioners wrote letters to the Lees and the company adjusting claims, explaining that the county had no easement in the land next to the roadbed. The public road in this case, like other county-maintained roads that had not been formally dedicated to the county, was only the actual width of the roadbed itself.
Also after the fact, the surveyor who prepared the plat attached to the Lees’ deed learned that the roads were not dedicated to the county, and revised the plat to show that the roads did not have formally deeded rights-of-way. The surveyor stated that when preparing the original plat, he assumed that the roads had been dedicated to the county. The county surveyor testified that the cable was installed on the Lees’ property and not county property.
The Lees sued Southern Telecom and the subcontractor who installed the cable, alleging that they entered the Lees’ property without their permission and installed fiber optic cable on the Lees’ property also without their permission. They sought compensatory and punitive damages as well as attorney fees and expenses of litigation. The complaint included a claim of nuisance and sought ejectment of the cable from their property. The defendants answered, and after conducting discovery, moved for summary judgment. The thrust of the motion was that the cable was installed in the right-of-way as shown on the plat attached to the Lees’ deed and that if any trespass occurred it was by a subcontractor, not Southern Telecom.
The trial court granted the motion. It held that independent contractors lawfully installed the cable on the right-of-way shown on the plat and that the Lees were bound by that plat. The court further found that the independent contractor was “solely responsible to the means, methods, and sequencing of the installation” and, citing OCGA § 51-2-4, that Southern Telecom was not liable for torts committed by the independent contractors.
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1. The underlying premise of the trial court’s grant of summary judgment is that the Lees could not maintain this action because the plat showed questions regarding the Lees’ ownership of the land on which the cable was installed. This is not the law in this state. “The right of enjoyment of private property being an absolute right of every citizen, every act of another which unlawfully interferes with such enjoyment is a tort for which an action shall lie.” OCGA § 51-9-1. Further, under OCGA §§ 51-9-2
1
and 51-9-3,
2
one in bare possession of land is sufficient to authorize recovery for interference with the possession of the land “in any manner.” Bare possession of land authorizes the recovery of damages from anyone wrongfully interfering with the possession.
Tacon v. Equity One,
Pretermitting whether the revision to the plat was sufficient to correct any technical deficiencies in the Lees’ title, they were in possession of the land on which the cable was installed and neither the county nor any other person or entity claims ownership of it. In these circumstances their possession of the land was sufficient to authorize them to bring this action.
2. In the motion for summary judgment Southern Telecom asserted that it was not liable because the cable was installed by an independent contractor and employers are not vicariously liable for the torts of independent contractors. See C.
W. Matthews Contracting Co. v. Wells,
C. W. Matthews Contracting Co. v. Wells does not require a different result. There this court found that the contractor was an innocent trespasser as a matter of law. Here, the evidence shows that Lee protested the installation of the cable on his land but the cable was installed there anyway. Further, the evidence shows that someone entered his land at another location and damaged his trees. This evidence is sufficient to raise a jury issue on whether the trespass was innocent.
Moreover, merely because the trespass was committed by a contractor, even one who was solely responsible to the means and methods of installation, does not relieve Southern Telecom from liability because the evidence does not address whether Southern Telecom directed where the cable should be installed.
Chattahoochee Brick Co. v. Goings,
It is well established that in determining whether an independent contractor is to be held liable for damages resulting from the work in connection with which he has been employed, it is usually necessary to look for guidance to the question whether the injury resulted from the improper plans or directions by which his employment was defined, or from the improper execution of work properly planned. In such cases, if it appears that the contractor has followed the plans and directions of his employer and injury has resulted, the employer, and not the contractor, is to be held liable. For unskillful or negligent execution of the work the contractor (and usually not the employer) is liable.
Jasper Constr. Co. v. Echols,
Accordingly, the trial court erred by granting summary judgment.
Judgment reversed.
Notes
“The bare right to possession of lands shall authorize their recovery hy the owner of such right, as well as damages for the withholding of such right.”
“The bare possession of land shall authorize the possessor to recover damages from any person who wrongfully interferes with such possession in any manner.”
